Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/09/08

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Subject: [Leica] I really disagree with this policy
From: bdcolen at comcast.net (B. D. Colen)
Date: Thu Sep 8 08:11:09 2005

Absolutely correct, Paul. I am not suggesting seeing people as raw fodder,
either for photographers or reporters. What's the old saw about getting more
bees with honey than vinegar? But when push comes to shove, the job requires
getting the story or the photo.


On 9/8/05 10:56 AM, "Paul" <paul@paulhardycarter.com> wrote:

> B. D. Colen - the Voice of Reason!
> 
> I quite agree, but I think you're missing the importance of the
> approach a photographer takes. If you go in regarding the people in
> front of your lens simply as subjects, as the raw material of your
> trade, then you'll screw it up. If you go in with empathy not only will
> your pictures be better but you're less likely to leave people feeling
> violated.
> 
> P.
> 
> *******
> Paul Hardy Carter
> www.paulhardycarter.com
> *******
> 
> On 8 Sep 2005, at 16:37, B. D. Colen wrote:
> 
>> Of course editors should be making the decisions, not military censors
>> - Hi,
>> Walt! :-) - but Paul is dead-on right that anything shot by military
>> photographers are going to be cleared by military censors. Why do you
>> think
>> they call them 'military photographers?'
>> 
>> As to the discussion about 'caring,' invasion of privacy, etc. etc. -
>> If photo journalists - and I do NOT consider celebrity paparazzi 'photo
>> journalists - and reporters stop to worry about whether their
>> presence, and
>> doing their job, may be 'hurtful' or 'upsetting' to those they are
>> photographing and covering, we will no longer have any real news
>> coverage.
>> No, being a news photographer or reporter is not for the faint of
>> heart.
>> Yes, one should try to be as respectful as possible when photographing
>> or
>> reporting the kind of situation we're witnessing in NO - or Iraq, or
>> Sudan,
>> or anywhere else where people suffering. But if one is going to do
>> one's
>> job, then one has to get that  photo, or story. Period.
>> 
>> I often tell my students that as a reporter - or for that matter as a
>> news
>> photographer - one is refereeing a constant wrestling match between
>> one's
>> self as a professional, and one's self as a person. And as an example
>> I tell
>> the story of having interviewed a chief of high-risk obstetrics for a
>> long
>> feature piece I was doing on a 34-year-old physician who died in
>> childbirth.
>> The doc I was interviewing had been a close friend of the dead woman,
>> and
>> had cared for her in the last, horrible, 18 hours of her life. In the
>> middle
>> of the interview this big, strapping guy leaned over onto his crossed
>> arms
>> on his desk and wept. Well, the human side of me wanted to be any
>> place but
>> where I was; I absolutely did not want to be witnessing this poor guy's
>> pain, and I didn't want to be adding to it. But the reporter side of
>> me was
>> ecstatic, and couldn't wait to get back and tell my editor about this
>> bit of
>> color for the story. Did I write about the incident? Of course. Was
>> the doc
>> upset that I did - absolutely not; he loved the story, which told in
>> great
>> detail of the ultimately futile struggle to save the patient's life.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On 9/8/05 10:08 AM, "Neil Schneider" <neilsimages@pipeline.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> 
>>> On Sep 8, 2005, at 9:45 AM, Paul wrote:
>>> 
>>>> On 8 Sep 2005, at 14:02, Neil Schneider wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> The AP moved photos yesterday shot by military photographers, with a
>>>>> note that they had been cleared by the military for release...the
>>>>> same kind of censor clearance note one has seen on photos moved from
>>>>> war zones.
>>>> 
>>>> Hardly surprising. These photographers are soldiers doing a job - do
>>>> you expect them to release pictures without going through channels?
>>>> 
>>>> P.
>>>> 
>>>> *******
>>>> Paul Hardy Carter
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> Don't you think the respective news editors should be the ones to
>>> decide what's acceptable to publish, and not the government.
>>> Do you have any idea what you are advocating when you say "go through
>>> channels".
>>> I don't really think you want to see government censorship at work
>>> here. Its not the society we live in for reports of a hurricane &
>>> flood.
>>> This is not a national security issue to my knowledge.
>>> The soldiers job there is to keep order, and search for bodies. Not to
>>> be photo suppliers for the media.
>>> Its perfectly fine for their photo units to document for the military
>>> archives, not distribute to media where it may be likely
>>> they are forbidding the media access. That still remains to be seen
>>> though.
>>> 
>>> Neil
>>> 
>>> 
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Leica Users Group.
>>> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
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>> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
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In reply to: Message from paul at paulhardycarter.com (Paul) ([Leica] I really disagree with this policy)